VA^^ 2f17 .3 - La Guardia And Wagner Archives
Transcription
VA^^ 2f17 .3 - La Guardia And Wagner Archives
TO Frank Mazurco Thanks for the clipping from Trombino about the C grand 91 630 at the Homestead Library. When they say it is inscribed to the King of Prussia , this sounds to me more like an old Soundboard decal with all our old "Royal Appointments" in a big decal. This number seems to me likely to have been shipped around 1899, and the short entry in the article saying H.C.Frick gave them a Steinway in 1899 seems to me to cut out any King of Prussia. There is also the fact that the King of Prussia was at that time the Emperor ( Kaiser) of Germany ever since the Franco - Prussian war in 1872. Will send a copy of this to Trombino. Yours VA^^ 2f17 .3 109 ! 'EEST 57tfi STREET NEWYORK, N.Y. 10019 James M. Stark 6408 Kentucky Avenue Pittsburgh, PA 15206 412-363-0462 E-mail : starkj2 c aol.com April 24, 2002 Henry Z. Steinway Steinway & Sons 1 Steinway Place Long Island City, NY 11105 Dear Mr. Steinway: I am a member of the board of The Steinway Society of Western Pennsylvania , and in chatting with Larry Kriner of Trombino Piano Galleries, he suggested that you might be the man to help me. I am doing research on the organ builder Philipp Wirsching (1858-1926 ) who built some residence organs for the Art Organ Company of New York between 1905 and 1909. That company was established by George Ashdown Audsley and Joseph Burr Tiffany, who was Artistic Director of Steinway & Sons at that time. The organs were sold through Steinway , and, in fact, two demonstration organs were built for Steinway Hall in 1905 and 1906. I have been trying to locate the original placement of these organs . Steinway & Sons being the kind of company it is, I thought there might still be some records hidden in the archives somewhere. I am aware of the following, which may be of interest to you: Eugene Clark residence, Yonkers, NY, 1905 Edson Bradley residence, Washington, DC, 1908 Gov. Franklin Murphy residence, Newark, NJ, 1908 Edgar Mills residence, New York, NY, 1909 Seymour Hyde residence, Greenwich, CT, undated Also, I suspect that an organ was built for the residence of Emerson Clark in Putnam Valley, NY, but I have been unable to confirm this. In addition, Wirsching built organs for A. K. Mansfield, Salem, OH, and the Palace of the Maharaja of Mysore , India (extant), but these may not have been Art Organ Company organs. Any information you might have would be gratefully received . There is another gentleman , David H. Fox who is working on a biography of Audsley, who would also be interested , or who may have already approached you. I have shared information with David , but have gotten little back . In any event, the information will either end up in print , or be deposited with the Organ Historical Society Archives in Princeton where other researchers can have access. Thank you for your help. Yours very truly, HENRY Z. STEINWAY 109 WEST 57th STREET NEW YORK, N.Y. 10019 James M. Stark 6408 Kentucky Ave Pittsburgh, PA15206 Dear Mr. Stark I am fascinated by your letter, but totally without any information. There are no surviving records of organs being sold at Steinway Hall, at that time located at 109 East 14th street. There was an attempt at an uptown branch in the years 1901 to 1904. It was in the Windsor Arcade on 46th street and fifth ave, and was filled with our fancy pianos from Tiffany's art case Dept. I guess too early for the organs you mention. I am not familiar with the Art Organ co. And what I have on Joseph Burr Tiffany is pretty slight. I know he was born in 1856, came with Steinway & Sons in 1897 to create our Art Case piano Dept. He left us in 1913, amicably I think. And he died in 1917. No mention in the obit I have of Art Organ co. What few reference books I ha•,7e here are all about pianos. Very best wishes on your research. ^-(1 Z (^a^, Cell ^6c ob oO zq^ cJ '2J TO Ray Rotuna FROM Henry Steinway About Pittburgh - as you suggested I am booked on U.S.Air #883 to arrive 1:34 on December 4. And back the next day on #1902 leaving at 11:40 AM. I have the confirmation for the Doubletree downtown. 61001 A'0 80AMJN 13381S 11LS 1S3M 601 AVMN^ 31S7d8N3H iron/6edeslof Edward Kocher, Dean Mary Pappert School of Music ot%pz^ )Ut . 11A^ ^ce.e /^ Education for the Mind, the Heart, and the Soul Mercedes-Benz John Sisson Motors 470 Washington Road Washington, PA 15301 Telephone 1-888-SISSON 1 Telephone (724) 206-6000 Telefax (724) 206-6020 ZII WO Trombino Piano Gallerie 942 Penn Avenue Downtown Pittsburgh, PA 15222 412.765.0600 4&Ei u&Ta3 _Li 4:v%s.ieaLES 2002 - 2003 Schedule After an enjoyable and successful first season , the lunchtime concert series returns for the 2002-2003 season with some of the finest artists in Pittsburgh performing many varying styles of music. Each recital is on the second Thursday of the month, begins at 12:10 pm, is approximately one-half-hour in length and is free to the public. Due to seating limitations , your call before each concert will be deeply appreciated. Please R.S.V.P. to 412 . 765.0600. September 12 Stephen Toney, Piano F Schubert, L. van Beethoven October 10 November 14 Eugene Alcalay, Piano & Kia-Hui Tan, Violin C. Franck Henry Spinelli, Piano W A. Mozart, J. Brahms, A. Beach, R. Schumann, M Ravel December 12 Bobby & Harry Cardillo Steinway Artists To be Announced January 9 Paul Sisco, Piano F Schubert February 13 Lori Gilbert, Piano S. Rachmaninoff, M Ravel, F Chopin March 13 Linda Ellison, Piano L. van Beethoven, S. Prokofiev, C. Debussy April 10 Sing Tsai, Piano W A. Mozart, F Chopin, S. Prokofiev May 8 Bradey Jeanne Walter, Piano To be Announced cELnwaj L.I^fJLa t - 4=7 /.ikal.ES. Z 2002 - 2003 Schedule Stephen Toney An accomplished pianist, concert organist, and choral conductor. He studied at the Juilliard School of Music with the Russian trained pianist Oxana Yablanskya. Mr. Toney currently serves as the liturgical music director of Mother of Sorrows Parish in Murrysville, Pennsylvania. Eugene Alcalay The legendary Leonard Bernstein brought him to America from Tel Aviv, Israel, personally sponsoring his education. Mr. Alcalay earned a Doctor of Musical Arts Degree in Piano from The Juilliard School under Seymour Lipkin. He has also studied piano with James Tocco, Karen Shaw, Edward Auer, Dimitri Paperno, Robert McDonald and Claude Frank. Mr. Alcalay currently teaches as a professor of piano studies at Geneva College. Kia-Hui Tan Born in Singapore, China, she did undergraduate study with David Takeno at the Guildhall School of Music in London and graduate study at The Cleveland Institute of Music. She is on the faculty of the Music Department at Cornell University. She has performed as a concerto soloist, recitalist, and chamber musician on five continents. Henry Spinelli Professor Emeritus of Music at Chatham College. While at Chatham, Professor Spinelli was twice awarded the Buhl professorship for excellence in the humanities. As a pianist, Spinelli has performed extensively throughout the United States, in Canada, and the Caribbean. Henry Spinelli has also been heard nationwide on the National Public Radio Network, and in Pittsburgh, many of his recorded performances have been broadcast on WQED-FM. Bobby and Harry Cardillo Are two distinctly different pianists, joined by genes and by a passion for jazz-father Bobby, the impeccable stylist, in the Teddy Wilson/ George Shearing tradition and son Harry, a restless adventurer, inspired by Bill Evans and Herbie Hancock. Paul Sisco Pittsburgh-born pianist Paul Sisco received his first musical instruction at the age of five from his father, a church organist and his uncle, a jazz clarinetist. He has been featured with the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, the Pittsburgh Ballet Orchestra, the Westmoreland Symphony Orchestra and the Pittsburgh Concert Society. He currently teaches at Chatham College. Lori Gilbert While working outside of the music field, Lori Gilbert has continued private piano studies with Harry Coleman for over twenty years. Lori has performed in local recitals over the last two decades and was a competitor in the 2002 Van Cliburn International Piano Competition for Outstanding Amateurs in Fort Worth, Texas. Linda Ellison She has performed solo and chamber music recitals throughout the United States, and has served on the faculties of Brown University, Carnegie Mellon University, Hamilton College, and Rhode Island College. Ms. Morgan-Ellison has recorded for WQED-FM and has been a featured artist on their program, "Performance in Pittsburgh." Sing Tsai A fourth-year medical student at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine who began piano lessons at age seven. She has studied with Dr. Paul Wirth at the Central Minnesota Music School and Ms. Olga Radosavljevich at the Cleveland Institute of Music. She received the Joseph Collins Foundation scholarship, an award given to medical students in the arts. Bradey Jeanne Walter This will be 7 year old Bradey Jeanne Walter's debut solo recital. She began piano lessons at the age of three, with her father, a piano teacher. At the age of four, it was recognized that she not only had perfect pitch but also an incredible tonal memory, with the ability to play, after hearing only once, a series of some 35 randomly chosen single pitches played on the piano. Trombino Piano Gallerie 942 Penn Avenue Pittsburgh, PA 15222 412.765.0600 The year 2003 will mark the 150th. Anniversary of Steinway & Sons In an age of mass production, Steinway & Sons remains a testament to individual craftsmanship, each year producing a limited number of handmade pianos, considered by many to be the finest in the world. Steinway & Sons was founded in 1853 by German immigrant Henry Engelhard Steinway in a Manhattan loft on Varick Street. Henry was a master cabinet maker who built his first piano in the kitchen of his Seesen, Germany home. By the time Henry established Steinway & Sons, he had built 482 pianos. The first piano produced by the company, number 483, was sold to a New York family for $500. It is now displayed at New York City's Metropolitan Museum of Art. Over the next forty years, Henry and his sons, Henry Jr., Albert, C.F. Theodore and Charles, developed the modem piano. Almost half of the company's 114 patented inventions were developed during this period. Many of these late nineteenth-century inventions were based on emerging scientific research, including the acoustical theories of the renowned physicist Hermann von Helmholtz. Steinway's revolutionary designs and superior workmanship began receiving national recognition almost immediately. Starting in 1855, Steinway pianos received gold medals at several U.S. and European exhibitions. The company gained international recognition in 1867 at the Paris Exhibition when it was awarded the prestigious "Grand Gold Medal of Honor" for excellence in manufacturing and engineering. It was the first time an American company had received this award. Steinway pianos quickly became the piano of choice for many members of royalty and won the respect and admiration of the world's great pianists. In 1866 Steinway & Sons opened the first Steinway Hall on 14th Street. With a main auditorium of 2,000 seats, it became New York City's artistic and cultural center, housing the New York Philharmonic until Carnegie Hall opened in 1891. By this time, the company had moved to its current location in the Astoria section of Queens, New York, and built Steinway Village. Virtually its own town, Steinway Village had its own foundries, factory, post office , parks and housing for employees. In 1871, Henry Sr. died and sons C.F. Theodore and William took over operations . An accomplished pianist, C.F. Theodore was responsible for the technical aspects of piano making and personally earned the company 41 patents, including one in 1875 for the modem concert grand piano . In the same year, William helped establish a showroom in London . Five years later, in 1880, the Hamburg factory began operating and a retail operation, the Steinway-Haus, was established. Another retail operation opened in Berlin in 1909. Today, Steinway & Sons crafts approximately 5,000 pianos a year worldwide . Over 900 prominent concert artists and ensembles across the world bear the title Steinway Artist. No artist or ensemble is a paid endorser of the piano. Each Steinway Artist personally owns a Steinway and has chosen to perform on the Steinway piano professionally. In North America, artists select their Steinway for concert performances from the company 's unique "piano bank," an inventory of more than 300 pianos valued at over $15 million. Pianos are placed throughout North America and are maintained to concert standards by an exclusive network of Steinway dealers. The famed "basement" of New York' s Steinway Hall, at 109 West 57th Street in New York City, is the bank's home office . Branch piano banks are maintained at Steinway dealerships in cities throughout the country to serve performing artists. In all other countries, major concert venues in each town own Steinway & Sons instruments which the artist can use. M STEINWAY & SONS